This volcano in Indonesia looks like it's seeping with blue lava. So what's going on here? It's not Photoshop. The images are, amazingly, real.

Joseph Stromberg over at Smithsonian talked to the photographer, Olivier Grunewald who is working on a documentary about the area along with Régis Etienne, to get the explanation of just what's happening at the Kawah Ijen volcano. Although the images of the blue eruption are quite real, it's not the lava itself that is responsible for the color, it's the sulfuric gas that's also being emitted:

"This blue glow, unusual for a volcano, isn't the lava itself, as unfortunately can be read on many websites," Grunewald says. "It is due to the combustion of sulfuric gases in contact with air at temperatures above 360°C." In other words, the lava—molten rock that emerges from the Earth at ultra-high temperatures—isn't colored significantly differently than the lava at other volcanoes, which all differ slightly based on their mineral composition but appear a bright red or orange color in their molten state. But at Kawah Ijen, extremely high quantities of sulfuric gases emerge at high pressures and temperatures (sometimes in excess of 600°C) along with the lava.

Exposed to the oxygen present in air and sparked by lava, the sulfur burns readily, and its flames are bright blue. There's so much sulfur, Grunewald says, that at times it flows down the rock face as it burns, making it seem as though blue lava is spilling down the mountainside. But because only the flames are blue, rather than the lava itself, the effect is only visible at night—during daytime, the volcano looks like roughly any other.

Besides the seemingly blue lava, the high sulfuric content is also responsible for the potentially hazardous gas in the air, in which local miners in the area work to extract sulfuric rock from the volcano's surface.